CHAPTER ITHE ARMED GUARD SERVICE

World War II, like every war which has ever been fought, was in large part a battle of the logisticians. Other factors being equal, the side usually wins which is best able to get
there first with the most men and material. When the United States became involved in the titanic world struggle the odds were heavily stacked against her from the standpoint of
logistics. Not only did Germany have control of the resources and communications of western Europe, her armies were also advancing deeply into Russia and were threatening to spread
through large parts of Africa. There was, in fact, a grave danger that a union between Japanese and German forces might take place somewhere in Asia and that Europe, Asia, and
Africa might pass under the effective control of the Axis before the resources of the Americas and of the British Empire could be thrown against the victorious invaders. Never had
the United States faced such a threat to her national existence. Never had this country faced so many well nigh insuperable problems at one time.

Given such a crucial situation,
the problem of moving vast numbers of men and vast supplies of material across submarine infested waters and against land based aircraft became as difficult as the problem of
training men and producing the weapons of war. Upon the success or failure of our efforts to move men and goods across the oceans hinged the destiny of the nation. The Chairman

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of the Maritime Commission has said that the merchant marine did not win the war, but that without merchant shipping the Allies would have lost. It can be safely asserted that
without naval defense of merchant ships the merchant marine would have been lost and the war would have been lost. If the war gave merchant ships their greatest role in
history, it also gave the men who defended these ships against submarines and planes a mission of supreme importance. This study describes the defense of merchant ships by
the Armed Guard of the United States Navy. It is as thrilling a story of triumph over difficulties, of heroism, devotion to duty, sacrifice, and courage as exists in the annals of
the nation. This story, which for reasons of military security was veiled in secrecy during the war, deserves to be told.

In this chapter attention will be given to the men of
the Armed Guard, their training, and to the guns which were placed aboard merchant ships. We shall see how the Navy which went to sea on merchant ships was administered and learn
something of the problems involved in training in four brief years more men than were in the entire United States Navy in 1937. Later chapters will describe the most important and
spectacular clashes with the enemy in the battle of the supply lanes. We shall see men, who had never been near the ocean, in mortal combat with the enemy after only a few brief
months of training. We shall follow them as they go down with their ships, their guns still blazing; as they die in the sea or endure the tortures

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of hell for days in life rafts. We shall see them as they defy all the laws of nature and remain at General Quarters beside their guns for unbelievable periods of time. We shall
see them as they return haggard and worn to the United States to take other ships to the battle zones. We shall see them as happier days come and better guns are placed on their
ships. We shall see them as they convert Armed Guard duty from the most hazardous duty afloat to the best duty in the Navy. We shall see them as they finally reach a stage where
submarines dare not surface near merchant ships and where enemy pilots are courting almost certain death to come within range of their anti-aircraft guns. This is a story of
American triumph over difficulties. It may not be true that the United States will ever become a great seafaring nation, but it is certain that her citizens can and do take to the
sea when the defense of the country demands it.

When the United States was suddenly called upon to arm vast numbers of ships and to place men aboard to man these guns there were
few precedents of any value which could be called up for guidance. It is true that in World War I some 384 merchantmen carried Navy personnel and guns,1 but this program was so
small compared with arming 6,236 ships in World War II that it offered little practical help. Besides, the records of World War I were not readily available to those who were
charged with arming merchant ships. It might appear that the British program would serve as a useful pattern in view of the fact that the British had been arming merchant ships for

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a long time. But the British Defensively Equipped Merchant Ships program (D. E. M. S.) was so radically different from the program which the United States had to follow
that it could not be copied. British Navy personnel formed only a small portion of the gunners, and officers were assigned only to the larger transports. The British depended
largely on merchant seamen to man guns on merchantmen, in view of their comparatively large crews, whereas the United States supplied Navy personnel to man all key positions, with
assistance from the merchant crew in passing ammunition, loading, and manning other less important stations. The difference arose in part from the diverse nature of the maritime
service in the two countries. In Britain all merchant sailors were registered under the Universal Conscription Act of August, 1940, placed in seamen pools, and paid both afloat and
ashore. They were completely under the control of the Ministry of Shipping and could be required to take gunnery training while in the pool awaiting further assignment. When
assigned a gunnery station British seamen received a shilling a day extra. The master was in charge of the defense of the ship. But on United States ships the defense of the ship
was a responsibility of the Armed Guard officer and his Navy gunners. The Armed Guard officer had the status of a commanding officer in the United States Navy. The United States
was unable to assign prime responsibility for manning guns to merchant seamen, for their was no control over them from the time they completed a voyage until they agreed to sign

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on for another voyage and, therefore, no means of forcing them to take the required gunnery training. Every facility was offered the merchant seamen while ashore to become
proficient in gunnery, but the only training of any importance took place under the direction of the Armed Guard officer while at sea. There was a definite tendency on the part of
merchant seamen to stay away from Armed Guard Gunnery Schools in the United States.

The United States Navy was somewhat handicapped in preparing to arm merchant ships by the
Neutrality Act of 1936. Given such as act as the law of the land it is not surprising that there was little far-sighted planning and no realization of the magnitude which the
problem would ultimately assume. A few people were trained in gunnery beginning in the spring of 1941, but the training program even after the repeal on November 17, 1941 of
Section 5 in the Neutrality Act, which prevented arming merchant ships, was wholly inadequate in numbers of men trained. Little progress was made in developing the vast
administrative machinery necessary to handle the Armed Guard Service until practically all authority was centered in the Arming Merchant Ship Section in the Fleet Maintenance
Division of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations on January 31, 1942. When CominCh assigned primary interest in training to this same section on September 11, 1942 the
Arming Merchant Ship Section finally had almost absolute authority over every phase of the Armed Guard Service. It, of course, delegated authority to make decisions on many matters
to other Bureaus and agencies in the Naval Establishment. Questions concerning communications on

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merchant ships never came under the cognizance of Op-23L, as the
section came to be known in the Navy Department.

Op-23L gave central direction to the program. It formulated doctrine and issued directives. It kept elaborate files and records.
It worked to improve training and to standardize all procedures in the Armed Guard Service. It worked to overcome the shortage of guns and trained personnel. It studied a multitude
of devices and items of equipment and approved the good while rejecting the bad. It was ever on the alert to catch matters which were going wrong and to detect new trends in
warfare. It was largely through its efforts that the Armed Guard Service became dynamic and was always improving, even to the end of the war with Japan. Working closely with the
Arming Merchant Ship Section was the Coordinator of Defense Installations on Merchant Ships in the Maritime Commission. A vast number of agencies were involved in the large and
expensive program to arm and defend merchant ships. The Bureau of Naval Personnel handled the assignment of personnel to Armed Guard duties and had responsibilities with regard to
preparing curricula for training, subject to directives from the Chief of Naval Operations (Op-23L). The Bureau of Ships and the Bureau of Ordnance supplied the guns and equipment
for defense of merchant ships, subject to directives from the Chief of Naval Operations. Much of this material was to be returned to the Navy at the end of hostilities. The
Maritime Commission -- War Shipping Administration, under the direction of the

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Coordinator of Defense Installations on Merchant Ships, had the responsibility for the installation of defense items in collaboration with local naval agencies at the yards. The Port
Directors were entrusted with the execution of directives from the Chief of Naval Operations (Op-23L) and played a large part in the administration of the entire program. Theirs
was the day by day responsibility to see that each ship which left port was properly armed, equipped, and manned with Armed Guards. They also arranged for necessary repairs and for
replenishment of material when ships returned from voyages. Under the Port Directors an efficient Armed Guard Inspection Service was developed.

A vast network of training activities prepared Armed Guards for their duties. There were three basic Armed Guard Schools for most of the war. These were located at Little Creek
(later moved to Shelton), Virginia; San Diego, California; and Gulfport, Mississippi. Prior to the establishment of the last mentioned school in the fall of 1942, training had been
given at an Armed Guard School at Chicago, Illinois. This school was closed because winter conditions on the Great Lakes were not suited to training. Near each Armed Guard School
was an anti-aircraft firing range where Armed Guards were given actual firing experience. These ranges were located at Dam Neck, Virginia; Shell Beach, Louisiana; and Pacific
Beach, California. Firing ships were also employed to give practical training to Armed Guards. Schools to give refresher training, especially in anti-aircraft gunnery, were
established at New York, New Orleans, San Francisco (Treasure Island),

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and Seattle. Armed Guards at these schools for a day or so of refresher training were given firing
practice at anti-aircraft ranges at Lido Beach, New York; Shell Beach, Louisiana; Point Montara, California; and Pacific Beach, Washington.

What type of men were brought into
the Armed Guard Service? The men of the Armed Guard came from all walks of life. Their most common characteristic perhaps was that few of them had ever been on the ocean. Since
there was an urgent need for large numbers of men to man the guns on merchant ships, the Navy took all officers and enlisted men who could be spared from combatant ships and other
activities and made them into Armed Guards. It was a terrific gamble on the ability of the navy to develop a training program which could turn men out for combat duty at a fast
pace and on the ability of these men, many of whom had never seen the ocean, to take to the sea under the most trying conditions. Men who had been living quiet and normal lives as
farmers, bankers, merchants, writers, lawyers, school teachers, and factory workers found themselves in mortal combat with the enemy after only a few months in the Navy. Men who
had never done more serious shooting than at ducks and quail soon found themselves bringing down German planes and firing heavy guns at submarines.

One requisite of Armed Guards was that they be in good physical condition. They must have good eyes, ears and teeth. They must be able to swim. But above all they must be people
who had their hearts in their work, who loved their country and were willing to sacrifice

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even their lives for it if necessary. The Armed Guard was no place for the never-do-well, the malcontent, or the loafer. For months Armed Guards lived aboard ship with highly paid
merchant seamen. They must be able to get along with men whose highest form of discipline probably came from the regulations of their labor union. Officers who served as commanding
officers in charge of Armed Guard crews were expected to have the usual traits of leadership expected of all naval officers who wear the uniform of the United States Navy. But
experience soon indicated that a certain ability to get along with masters of ships was an important characteristic. Emphasis soon shifted away from the procurement of the very
young officer and especially of the person who knew or thought he knew too much about running merchant ships. The ideal Armed Guard officer was a tactful person who could look
after the interests of his men and at the same time keep relations smooth between the navy complement and the master, officers, and crew of the merchant ship. He was a man who
could get along with people who were under great mental strain and who could win their confidence. His relations with his gunners were close. He was a kind of doctor, chaplain, and
commanding officer at the same time. The highly nervous individual did not last in the Armed Guard. Neither did the trouble maker nor the officer who had too exalted an idea of the
scope of his duties and the privileges which the uniform of the United States Navy conferred upon him. The calm, but not necessarily brilliant, individual often made a much better
officer than the erratic and highly intelligent man who cracked in a crisis.

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When officers and enlisted men had completed their basic training they were assigned to one of three
Armed Guard Centers. These were located at Brooklyn (Atlantic), New Orleans (Gulf), and Treasure Island (Pacific). From the Centers the men were assigned to ships. The final
complement for a ship armed with a 5"/38 dual purpose stern gun, a 3"/50 AA gun, and eight 20 mm machine guns was set at one officer and 24 gunners, plus normally about three
communications men for a total of 28 Armed Guards. This armament was accepted as the standard for ships which were going to combat zones in World War II. It goes without saying
that many ships went out in the early days with less than the armament desired and with smaller Armed Guard crews. Shortages in officers and men were met by rapid increases in the
training program and at times by sending petty officers out in charge of the smaller gun crews on ships operating in the less dangerous areas. Not until early 1945 was the shortage
in guns entirely overcome. But the Navy made every effort to give every ship the best possible protection.

The Centers were the wartime duty station of Armed Guards when they
were not at sea. They handled the records, mail, and pay accounts of Armed Guards. They administered discipline, furnished recreation and additional training, and attended to the
health and legal problems of Armed Guards. Special attention was given to the matter of furnishing proper foul and cold weather clothing and recreational equipment for use of Armed
Guards.

In the standardization of procedures and training the Arming Merchant Ships Section received special help from the Armed Guard Gunnery

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School at New York and the Armed Guard School at Shelton. The Bureau of Aeronautics gave valuable aid in the development of many synthetic training devices. Before the war was over
a man could walk into a gunnery school and experience realities of battle without actually meeting the enemy. Of great help in the development of the Armed Guard Service and in the
long and complicated quest for standardization were the visits of personnel from various Armed Guard activities to Washington and to other Armed Guard establishments. Outstanding
Armed Guard officers who had been in especially heavy engagements with the enemy were brought to Washington to give information on the latest enemy tactics. Such men were also made
instructors in the schools. In no branch of the Naval Service was combat experience for instructors emphasized more than in the Armed Guard.

Armed Guards studied many subjects.
But the primary emphasis was on shooting at planes and submarines. They also learned something of seamanship and many officers studied simple navigation. Part of the Armed Guards
on each ship eventually had training in fire fighting. Armed Guards, in fact, established a fine record in fighting fires on ships, although this was not a prime responsibility.
Recognition of aircraft was naturally stressed and the fire control record of Armed Guards, was on the whole a very fine one.

Many defense installations were tried during the
war. Among the most successful were degaussing ships against magnetic mines and smoke floats for hiding ships from view of attacking aircraft. Barrage balloons and kites were also
used with some success in the European and

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Mediterranean theaters as protection against low flying aircraft. Crew quarters for Armed Guards, magazines for stowing ammunition, life saving equipment, special gun foundations
and armor protection for guns were other important defense items. Facilities were provided for blacking out every ray of light on merchant ships. Special provisions were made for
tankers to fuel escorts at sea and to apply them with depth charges. This meant that escorts had unlimited cruising range and unlimited supplies of depth charges to drop on lurking
submarines. Special protection for sea valves on merchant ships and closure of tonnage openings and extensions of watertight bulkheads were also very important installations which
saved many ships to fight again. There were a number of other special installations, but those enumerated above were the most important.

Figures compiled by the Maritime
Commission and by the Arming Merchant Ship Section in the Office of Naval Operations give a comprehensive picture of the importance of the Armed Guard in World War II. When the war
began the United States had only about 1340 cargo ships and tankers. When the war ended the fleet of merchant ships controlled by the War Shipping Administration numbered 4,221
with a deadweight tonnage of 44,940,000 tons. Up to VJ day 733 merchant ships of over 1000 gross tons were lost, according to figures of the Maritime Commission. The Navy armed
6236 ships to the end of World War II. Of this number 4870 were United States flag ships; 244 were United States owned but under foreign flag; the rest were foreign owned and
foreign flag ships. Armed Guards were placed aboard nearly all of the 5114 United States owned and United States flag ships. They were placed aboard a few allied

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ships which
were foreign flag and foreign owned but only in exceptional circumstances. Of the United States flag or United States owned ships which were armed and most of which were supplied
with an Armed Guard crew 569 were lost. The total loses of all merchant ships armed with Navy guns ran to 710. These figures are substantially complete as of August 12, 1946. It
will be seen that of the ships which were supplied with Armed Guards a little better than ten percent were lost from all causes.

This vast fleet of merchant ships carried the
materials needed for victory to all parts of the world. Between December 7, 1941 and the surrender of Japan 268,252,000 long tons of cargo left United States ports. About three
fourths of this cargo was carried in ships controlled by the War Shipping Administration. Imports during the war ran to 70,652,000 tons of dry cargo and 35,118,000 tons brought
back in tankers. A large part of this cargo was brought in on ships defended by Armed Guards. From the outbreak of war to November 30, 1945 over seven million Army personnel and
more than one hundred and forty-one thousand civilians were transported overseas. Many were carried in Army and Navy transports. Many were carried in merchant ships. The Armed
Guard defended the merchant ships and the Army transports. During the same period almost four and a quarter million personnel were returned to the United States.

The Armed Guards played an important part in defending ships which cost $22,500,000,000 to build and operate. The value of the cargo which they defended cannot be estimated in
dollars. Upon the safe arrival of this cargo depended the future of every American and of the world. Total

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costs of the Armed Guard program have not been figured, but it seems for certain that it ran to more than two billion dollars. Training and maintaining a group of men larger than
the entire United States Navy in 1937 and supplying more than 53,000 guns and many other defense items naturally cost much money. But the Armed Guard Service paid such high
dividends in ships and cargo saved that its cost may be termed nominal.

Armed Guards won glory for themselves on every ocean. Up to the time this was written (August, 1946) 8,033
had received decorations or commendations. This figure includes 5 Navy Crosses, 2 Legion of Merit, 75 Silver Stars, 24 Navy and Marine Corps Medals, 54 Bronze Stars, 563
commendations by the Secretary of the Navy, 2,778 commendations by the Bureau of Naval Personnel, and 4,533 entries in service records. About 36,240 operation and engagement stars
have been authorized for Armed Guards to date and this figure may run even higher eventually. In addition, 9,882 men have been authorized to wear the Philippine Liberation Ribbon
and 4,031 have been authorized to wear stars on this ribbon. Five destroyer escorts, one destroyer, and a transport have been named for Armed Guard officers who were heroes in
combat. These ships are the USS Borum, named for Lt. (jg) John R. Borum who served on the SS Brilliant; the USS Brennan, named for Ens. John J. Brennan who served on
the SS Otho; The USS Herzog, named for lt. (jg) William R. Herzog who served on the SS Pan New York; the USS Hunter Marshall, named for Ens. Hunter
Marshall who served on the SS Merrimack; the USS Willett, named for Ens. Kenneth M. Willitt who served on the SS Stephen Hopkins;

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the USS Vesole, named for Ens. Kay K. Vesole who served on the SS John Bascom; and the USS Walsh, named for Lt. (jg) Patrick J. Walsh who served on the SS
Patrick J. Hurley.

The war took a terrible toll of merchant seamen and Armed Guards. But the situation was never as bad as the "Sighted Sub, Glub, Glub" slogan would
indicate. The Maritime Commission indicates that 5,638 merchant seamen and officers are dead and missing from World War II and that 581 were made prisoners.2 Armed Guard dead and
missing out of 144,970 in the service numbered 1,810, of which 1,683 were definitely killed and 127 were missing. Prisoners of war numbered 27, of which 14 were recovered.

In
the files of the Arming Merchant Ship Section are reports of some 1,966 air attacks and 1,024 submarine attacks. Some of these reports cover more than one contact with the
enemy. It is obvious that several Armed Guards often reported on the same attack. Figures for planes destroyed can never be exact, but 467 ships participated in destroying planes
and these ships were credited with 477 destroyed, 66 probably destroyed, and 315 assists in destroying planes.